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November 13, 2008 4:57 PM PST

NASA unveils lunar image recovery project

by Daniel Terdiman

NASA has released a fully restored 42-year-old image of Earth taken from the moon. The image was released as part of a project that will allow scientists at NASA and beyond to compare historical images of the moon with new images that will be captured when NASA sends new missions to the moon in the coming years.

(Credit: NASA/LOIRP)

MOFFETT FIELD, Calif.--Scientists who want to see how the moon has changed in the years since the Apollo missions will soon have the ability to do just that.

That's thanks to a new NASA project in which the agency has restored 42-year-old images taken of and from the moon, all of which will be made freely available to the public.

And while many people will surely have an interest in examining the iconic images, several NASA personnel on hand Thursday at an event celebrating the project explained that it provides the real scientific benefit of making it possible to closely compare even the smallest changes to the lunar surface over the last 40-plus years.

The images in question were taken in the 1960s by cameras onboard five separate Lunar Orbiter spacecraft. They were captured on magnetic tapes and then transferred to film for analysis.

Unfortunately, the full resolution of those images was not available because the technology didn't exist to extract it all.

And in the years since, the data has been stored on large tapes, awaiting the eventual decision of what to do about them.

Now, the Lunar Orbiter Image Recovery Project (LOIRP), which is based at NASA Ames Research Center here, has undertaken the task of translating the original analog data from 1,500 tapes taken from the Lunar Orbiter spacecraft and stored at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory into digital form from which the highest resolution can finally be analyzed.

"This project is an opportunity to revel in what was done in the past," said Pete Worden, director of Ames Research Center, "and get excited about what we're doing in the future."

In particular, Worden said, because once NASA returns to the moon in the coming years, scientists looking closely at the high-resolution versions of the images will be able to see in minute detail how things on the lunar surface have changed.

Once the translation of the images is finished, NASA plans to make all of them available to the public in digital form with the idea that they will be viewable for generations to come.

Worden said that one benefit of being able to compare the historical images with new ones that will be taken starting next spring from the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter is that it will be possible to see recent meteor impacts too small to see in images taken from afar.

And that's because these images are the highest-resolution taken of the lunar surface to date, said Dennis Wingo, who led the image recovery process.

Greg Schmidt, deputy director of NASA's recently opened Lunar Science Institute, said: "Just imagine for a moment taking these images here, and the hundreds more (that will be generated by LOIRP) and comparing them with what the lunar reconnaissance orbiter will be returning to us in the coming years. We're going to see how the moon is changing, and I'm expecting some very interesting surprises."

The image shown above, the "image of the century," was the first ever taken in which Earth is seen from another celestial body. In it, it is possible to see the north coast of Africa, as well as the glint of the sun on the Atlantic Ocean, said Wingo.

That glint is important, Wingo said, because it indicates to astronomers the possibility of other Earth-style planets.

Wingo also explained how he and his team worked frame by frame to extract the original analog information and turn it into the currently available digital images (See video below).

All told, Wingo said his team has 48,000 pounds of tape to deal with, and that the time frame to complete the project is very short as there is only one person on Earth who has the expertise to work with the playback heads needed to process the original tapes. And at 68 years old, he wants to retire in just 14 months.

"We're almost at the closing of the window," Wingo said. "If we hadn't done this now, it wouldn't have been possible."

Daniel Terdiman is a staff writer at CNET News covering games, Net culture, and everything in between. E-mail Daniel.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) (6 Comments)
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by solitare_pax November 13, 2008 5:38 PM PST
Lets see - we spent millions of dollars to sent people and probes out into space, but we don't have the money set aside to develop a long-term solution for archiving, retrieving, sharing and examining this data as it comes in? Its not just the lunar missions - the Viking mission tapes were nearly lost because they threw out the 7-track tape reader needed to read the old reels. What other information have we lost while they dub around for another decade to replace the shuttle?
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by sythara November 14, 2008 8:33 AM PST
Its because sertain president and congress cut the funding after the missions were complete. That is how the world of finance works in the Gov't. Some congress have "other priorities".
by BigGuns149 November 16, 2008 2:54 PM PST
This is also an important story for virtually every government agency that needs to retain data for 40+ years. Data retention isn't cheap. I remember a story that PC Mag did for their 20th anniversary issue where they had to find ancient hardware to read some ancient backup tapes they had used to store the data from the older issues. Had they waited 40 years like NASA they would have been in the same situation having literally a handful of people having the knowledge to retrieve the information nevermind finding the hardware.

Provided that the schematics to build the reader is well documented there should be no reason that you can't have an engineer go back and build a new reader even if every known reader for said medium has been lost or destroyed. The problem is that in many cases a lot of these early technologies weren't documented very well either because no one foresaw anyone being interested in the data after a few years or the designs were so proprietary that few copies of the designs were ever made and hence the few existing copies were easily lost.
by Galaxy5 November 13, 2008 6:31 PM PST
I'm really bummed I missed this talk - I was set to go, but got busy at work.

These recoveries from old video tape are really amazing. I'm glad that after some initial missteps with this historic information that NASA is showing the fruits of its labors.
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by TogetherinParis November 14, 2008 12:15 AM PST
40 years? I'm glad we've had no civil wars and the NASA tapes have been kept safe from harm.
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by snailsnail April 5, 2009 4:33 PM PDT
Fascinating stuff...
"there is only one person on Earth who has the expertise to work with the playback heads needed to process the original tapes"...
anybody else think those 14 months (and, presumably, preceding years) could have been better used to train a couple of other people up to take on the task?
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